Thant Zaw Soe

Evaluation of Habitat and Human – Asiatic Black Bear Conflicts in Mauk Mai Region, Myanmar

Claw marks of Asiatic Black Bear.

Nest of Asiatic Black Bear.

Interview with farm owners.

Town/RegionCountryCategoriesDate
Taunggyi Mauk Mai, ShanMyanmarAsia, Conflict, People7 Jun 2010

Asiatic Black Bear(Ursus thibetanus) is listed in IUCN red list as vulnerable. It is also listed on Appendix I of the Convention on the Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES). It is distributed around the hilly and mountainous region of Myanmar.

Threats to the species include habitat disturbances, persecution by local people in the assumption that it kills the domestic livestock and it raids the cultivated crop.

People need forest resources to survive and ABB also need their habitat well to live long. As the expansion of human land use, crop raiding by ABB is common in Mauk Mai region, Southern Shan State of Myanmar. Human and wildlife conflict has always been exaggerated by the agricultural crop loss and rarely by human mauling. As main occupation of the local people is agricultural crop production, when they loss their crop production, they have bellyful of the existence of ABB and they often kill ABB in retaliation or to prevent future conflicts. So, human-Bear conflict is one of the major threats to survival of ABB. To find out solution for minimizing the human-bear conflict, we need to determine the status of Asiatic Black Bear and their habitat, assess the nature and frequency of human-bear conflicts in the region, and understand local communities’ perception of the problems.

With this project, we will summarize the nature, extent and location of the Human-Asiatic Black bear conflict situations, local residents’perception of the problems and status and distribution of Asiatic Black bear and their habitat. The effective strategies for minimizing human-bear conflict will only be designed when we have the information on the species and conflicts in hand. The data and the information of this project can be used as a baseline for any governmental or nongovernmental initiative aimed to manage the human-bear conflict humanely in the region. Therefore, I believe that this project will translate into a long term model for minimizing human-bear conflict in the region.

For further information contact tzawsoe@gmail.com

Project Update: January 2011

Our project started in the last week of June 2010. We have completed first step of our project (preliminary survey) through informal interviews and questionnaire surveys. Interviews, meetings and visits to villages were carried out in order to explain study objectives to local residents and to estimate the high conflict zone and potential habitat area of Asiatic black bear. Within each village we have interviewed farmers, forest users and victims. Following these interviews, we conducted questionnaire survey in 22 villages in order to document people’s attitudes, conflict types, Asiatic black bear status and local residents’ perception on Asiatic black bear and human-bear conflict.

The second step of the project (sign survey) is ongoing. We will survey and record black bear signs such as claw marks, nets, scats, diggings and footprints.


Other Projects in: